NPR's Michel Martin speaks with historian Beverly Gage about her biography of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI's history of civilian surveillance.
President Biden's move to pardon his son Hunter has been met with criticism — from opponents and some allies. We look at what that means for his legacy.
The latest in a string of food safety recalls, the CDC is recalling Mexican cucumbers due to a salmonella outbreak that has sickened at least 68 people in 19 states.
The focal point of the case is 2009 law enacted by Congress that gives the Food and Drug Administration a mandate to curb the ...
The Department of Commerce anticipates a nearly $403 million shortfall in fee revenue that goes toward programs like ...
Syrian rebels have swept through parts of the country at lightning pace, taking control of the the second-largest city, ...
Nearly all new cars now come with automatic emergency braking and other safety features. Researchers say these systems are ...
President Biden makes his first and only trip to Africa in his presidency, as he travels to Cabo Verde and Angola.
As the transition to a new administration approaches, what is the likely impact on a decidedly nervous State Department?
The William S. Burroughs novella "Queer" has been transformed for the big screen. Daniel Craig plays a swaggering-yet-desperate expatriate living in Mexico City who longs for a younger man.
The Ryan White program serves about half a million people with HIV, and 90% of them are successfully keeping the virus at undetectable levels. But will Republicans cut funding for the effort?
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Eliot Cohen of the Center for Strategic and International Studies about Ukraine's strategies preceding President-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House.